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Side-by-Side Comparison: Ultimate Ears Blast vs UE Boom 2

• Very loud• Excellent evenness and clarity• Strong, solid bass• Good 360-degree delivery (place it in the middle of the party)• Great on its own, but even better as a stereo pair — doing so creates a true portable stereo experience with a wider soundstage and lots more volume• Can connect 150+ units (with your friends' UE Boom 2s for instance) for an enormous party

• Very loud• Excellent evenness and clarity• Strong, solid bass• Good 360-degree delivery (place it in the middle of the party)• Cannot be paired with a second unit

"Smart" features

• Limited integration with Siri, Google Now, and Amazon Alexa connecting through your smartphone• Examples: Voice commands allow you to play a rock mix, change volume, skip tracks• This works anywhere that your smartphone is connected• Can be paired with Amazon Echo Dot for full Alexa smart speaker experience

• Full integration with Amazon Alexa; ask it for the weather, news, a recipe — anything that Alexa does• First reports on smart features are somewhat fiddly and unreliable for some users• Smart features only work when the speaker is connected to WiFi

Critical Take on the Ultimate Ears Blast and the UE Boom 2

The Blast and Boom 2 from Ultimate Ears (a.k.a. UE/Logitech) are a bit taller, a bit thinner than the Amazon Echo (2nd generation). They’re also a good step up in terms of sound quality from Amazon’s own speaker offerings.

The UE Boom 2 has long been our most-recommended speaker for travellers as it fills a room or animates an outdoor party with even sound, excellent punchy bass — and yet is only the size of a tall beer can.

We’re far from the only ones who love the UE Boom 2; it has been at or near the top of lists of audiophiles, bloggers, and consumer testing organizations for a couple of years.

Does the newer Ultimate Ears Blast sound better than the UE Boom 2?

It’s debatable; some listeners say yes, some say no. Mostprofessional criticswholistenedto the Ultimate Ears Blast and compared it to the UE Boom 2 felt that they were not quite identical, but very similar in sound. Both excel in providing quite a bit of separation and soundstage for such small speakers, and have powerful, punchy bass ends.

The UE Boom 2 hasjustabitmorebasstosomecritics’ears, whereas the Ultimate Ears Blast is just a bit more evenly balanced. Both handle well at top volumes. To sum up, they’re both excellent speakers for their size (also nearly identical), and there’s there’s not enough of a difference to base one’s decision in this area.

They also both excel at providing 360-degree sound; they’re designed to be placed right in the center of the party and sound lovely no matter where around them you are standing/busting your moves.

Do note, however, that you can definitely get better sound by pairing two or more UE Boom 2s (not possible with the Blast).

Are the Ultimate Ears Blast’s “smart speaker” features worth it?

Initially many users have complained of some fiddliness with the smart features of the Ultimate Ears Blast — we suspect that this may be ironed out eventually with firmware upgrades. There are minor complaints about poor voice recognition and the lack of a “listening” light cue to show that the unit is paying attention to your voice.

If you are looking for this mainly for the smart speaker features, we’d suggest the Amazon Echo instead.

Or, even better, purchase an Amazon Echo Dot for the smart features and pair it to your UE Boom 2, which is the more fully featured portable speaker. Or pair the Dot to a home speaker system for the really top-level sound that only a larger system can provide. If you’re more in the Google universe, you might opt for the Google Home Miniinstead.

Note that the UE Boom 2 does itself offer some basic integration with Alexa as well as Google Now and Siri; you can speak to it for music cues like skipping tracks or launching a playlist (but not to ask for stock quotes, do your shopping, get information…).

Link up multiple speakers: A major advantage of the UE Boom 2

UE’s mobile apps (for iOS and Android) allow you to link various up to 150 UE Boom 2s (as well as Megabooms or the original UE Boom) to create a much larger mobile party.

We see this capability as a major advantage for the UE Boom 2. Using two UE Boom 2s together allows you to create true stereo sound, or to simply link up friends’ speakers as the size of your gathering increases. It’s an easy way to have much better and bigger sound while on the go.

Other features of the UE Boom 2 and Ultimate Ears Blast

Waterproofing and dustproofing

Both speakers are incredibly well-built small cylinders whose customers report have tolerated lots of drops, dunks, and other abuse. The Boom 2 is IPX7 rated, which means that it can be underwater for up to 30 minutes with no ill effects. The Blast is IP67 rated, which means that in addition to the same waterproofing, UE is guaranteeing it to be dustproof as well — completely sealed against foreign particles.

Long battery life

At 15 hours for the UE Boom 2 and 12 hours for the Ultimate Ears Blast, both go quite a bit longer than any party I’d throw. If you for some reason need even more long-lasting tunes while off the grid, consider our comparison with the Fugoo speakers, or just buy an external USB battery, which can recharge your speaker, phone, and other devices several times over.

You might not think you’d put a speaker on a tripod, but it’s quite a convenient way to set it up in the middle of an outdoor party. We especially like to repurpose flexible, claw-grip tripods for this purpose.

Speakerphone (UE Boom 2 only)

The UE Boom 2’s speakerphone function works great for calls, both for hearing and being heard.

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